Abstract: | A general procedure is presented for generating one-electron integrals over any arbitrary potential operator that is a function of radial distance only. The procedure outlines that for a nucleus centered at point C integrals over Cartesian Gaussians can be written as linear combinations of 1-D integrals. These Cartesian Gaussian functions are expressed in a compact form involving easily computed auxiliary functions. It is well known that integrals over the Coulomb operator can be expressed in terms of Fn(T) integrals, where By means of a substitution for Fn(T) by other simple functions, algorithms that form integrals over an arbitrary function can be generated. Formation of such integrals is accomplished with minor editing of existing code based on the McMurchie–Davidson formalism. Further, the method is applied using the inverse-square distance and Yukawa potential operators V(r) over Cartesian Gaussian functions. Thus, the proposed methodology covers a large class of one-electron integrals necessary for theoretical studies of molecular systems by ab initio calculations. Finally, by virtue of the procedure's recursive nature it provides us with an efficient scheme of computing the proposed class of one-electron integrals. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. |